THE BUSINESS PLANNING POCKETBOOK By Neil Russell-Jones Drawings by Phil Hailstone “Excellent - clear, concise and very practical.” Kevin Jones, Group Planning Executive, Norwich Union “Excellent introduction to the basics of planning. Sets out a simple useful framework for those who are new to the world of business planning.” Nicholas Beazley, Head of Strategic Planning, BUPA Published by: Management Pocketbooks Ltd 14 East Street, Alresford, Hants SO24 9EE, U.K. Tel: +44 (0)1962 735573 Fax: +44 (0)1962 733637 E-mail: pocketbks@aol.com Web: www.pocketbook.co.uk All rights reserved This edition published 1998. Reprinted 1999, 2000 © Neil Russell-Jones 1998 ISBN 1 870471 58 X British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data – A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Printed in U.K. MANAGEMENT POCKETBOOKS CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 1 Definitions, corporate & business planning, visions, strategies and plans PLANNING THEORY 15 What is a plan, why plan, elements of a plan, eight planning styles PLANNING PROCESS 35 Seven stages of the planning process PRACTICAL PLANNING 69 Structuring, example company, communicating, contingency planning, organising to plan, planning cycle, time charts, critical path management, tips SUMMARY 102 NB [...]... use the terms interchangeably which leads to confusion In a business sense, however: ● ● The strategy is the articulation of the vision into practical reality, given the actual situation ● 8 A vision is the long-term view or ideal that drives the organisation The plan is the tactical means of achieving the strategy - the actions that need to be taken ...INTRODUCTION BUSINESS PLANNING Business planning is concerned with what is going to be done now to achieve targets and goals It sits, therefore, at the tactical level rather than the strategic It is necessarily short-term in outlook; but can nevertheless span a number of years For example, building a ship or a petroleum cracking plant might take several years to complete, but this would... a business plan (although for some firms it might be a very large component) Generally, business plans take a one year horizon, although they will sit within the long-term framework established at a corporate level 7 INTRODUCTION VISIONS, STRATEGIES & PLANS It is important to understand the difference between a vision, a strategy and a plan People often use the terms interchangeably which leads to . BOOK? The Business Planning Pocketbook concentrates on what you need to do to produce a plan. It includes both the theory and the practical aspects. Whatever your situation, the basic planning. referred to as business planning . Corporate planning is concerned with planning for the organisation as a whole - not for the whole organisation; and it is important to understand the difference. Any. Union “Excellent introduction to the basics of planning. Sets out a simple useful framework for those who are new to the world of business planning. ” Nicholas Beazley, Head of Strategic Planning, BUPA Published